Keith & Jackie Lorman, Charles & Melissa Gallagher, and Daniel & Alicia Daly v. City of Rutland
This text of 2018 VT 64 (Keith & Jackie Lorman, Charles & Melissa Gallagher, and Daniel & Alicia Daly v. City of Rutland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
REIBER, C.J.
¶ 1. Plaintiffs sought relief from the City of Rutland after suffering sewage backups in their homes. The trial court granted summary judgment to the City, concluding that plaintiffs failed to adequately support their negligence, nuisance, trespass, and constitutional takings claims. Plaintiffs appeal, arguing that they produced sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment. We affirm the court's decision.
¶ 2. The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Plaintiffs live on Butterfly Avenue in the City of Rutland. The City's sewage/stormwater system is over 100 years old. Two combined sewer/stormwater lines run under plaintiffs' street. Originally, these pipes consisted of a 12-inch vitrified clay pipe on the western line and a parallel 15-inch vitrified clay pipe on the eastern line. In 1987, the City conducted a video inspection of the pipes, which showed that the pipes were cracked, structurally unsound, and that they had significant root intrusion. The following year, based on the root intrusion, engineering recommendations, and financial considerations, the City undertook a so-called slip-lining process that inserted polyethylene sleeves of lesser diameter through the clay pipes. It slip-lined the 12-inch clay pipe on the western line with a 9-inch polyethylene pipe, and it slip-lined the 15-inch clay pipe on the eastern line with a 12-inch polyethene pipe.
¶ 3. In May 2014, the City experienced an extremely intense rain and hail storm, accompanied by high winds; 1.3 inches of rain fell in just fifteen minutes. The total rainfall was 1.65 inches. The flow rate at the City's main sewer interceptor rose instantly from approximately 7 million gallons per day (MGD) to almost 70 MGD, and the storm caused 3 million gallons of combined wastewater (domestic sewage and stormwater) to overflow to receiving streams. That day, the City's combined sewer/stormwater line also backed up into the basements of plaintiffs' homes causing property damage.
¶ 4. In January 2015, plaintiffs sued the City, asserting that it had been negligent in the design, construction, and/or maintenance and repair of the City's public sewer lines. Plaintiffs also raised nuisance, trespass, and constitutional takings claims. With respect to their negligence claim, plaintiffs alleged that the City had not acted reasonably or prudently in designing the lines and in deciding to slip-line them in 1988. They further asserted that the City had a duty to keep and maintain the lines in a reasonably safe and proper condition for the public's use and benefit. Plaintiffs sought damages as well as injunctive relief requiring the City to remedy the storm/wastewater system near their property to prevent future damages. 1
¶ 5. The City moved for summary judgment. In addition to the facts recited above, the City produced evidence that it has had an excessive number of combined storm/sewer overflows due in part to the age of its infrastructure and that it has limited resources in addressing these issues. The City also noted that the state and the federal governments imposed significant regulatory constraints on its actions and priorities, which was one of many factors that influenced the City's decisions regarding the use of its limited funds. Plaintiffs' expert agreed that deciding the priority of projects was a matter of discretion and that such decisions involved the exercise of judgment and the weighing of technical merit and available resources. Based on these and additional proffered facts, the City maintained that it was entitled to summary judgment on numerous grounds, including immunity and plaintiffs' failure to establish causation for the negligence and nuisance claims.
¶ 6. Plaintiffs opposed the motion, submitting an affidavit from their expert engineer to supplement the expert's deposition testimony. With respect to their negligence claim, plaintiffs argued that they had produced evidence to show that the cause of the sewage backup in their homes was a combination of a bend in the westernmost pipe and a reduction in flow caused by the slip-lining. The parties disagreed about the degree of the bend in the pipe; they also disagreed whether the slip-lining had reduced the water flow given the root intrusion and other issues with the pre-1988 pipes. Plaintiffs also challenged the City's position regarding their nuisance, trespass, and takings claims.
¶ 7. In an April 2017 order, the court granted summary judgment to the City. It concluded that plaintiffs could not establish causation for purposes of their negligence claim. It thus did not reach the City's remaining arguments regarding this claim. Given the absence of causation, the trial court also rejected plaintiffs' nuisance claim. As to trespass, the court found that plaintiffs needed to show an intentional act and that there was no such allegation or evidence of that here. Finally, the court found that plaintiffs failed to present sufficient evidence to support their takings claim. This appeal followed.
¶ 8. We review a grant of summary judgment using the same standard as the trial court.
Richart v. Jackson
,
Smith v. Day
,
I. Immunity
A. Governmental/Proprietary Distinction
¶ 9. We begin with the question of immunity.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
REIBER, C.J.
¶ 1. Plaintiffs sought relief from the City of Rutland after suffering sewage backups in their homes. The trial court granted summary judgment to the City, concluding that plaintiffs failed to adequately support their negligence, nuisance, trespass, and constitutional takings claims. Plaintiffs appeal, arguing that they produced sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment. We affirm the court's decision.
¶ 2. The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Plaintiffs live on Butterfly Avenue in the City of Rutland. The City's sewage/stormwater system is over 100 years old. Two combined sewer/stormwater lines run under plaintiffs' street. Originally, these pipes consisted of a 12-inch vitrified clay pipe on the western line and a parallel 15-inch vitrified clay pipe on the eastern line. In 1987, the City conducted a video inspection of the pipes, which showed that the pipes were cracked, structurally unsound, and that they had significant root intrusion. The following year, based on the root intrusion, engineering recommendations, and financial considerations, the City undertook a so-called slip-lining process that inserted polyethylene sleeves of lesser diameter through the clay pipes. It slip-lined the 12-inch clay pipe on the western line with a 9-inch polyethylene pipe, and it slip-lined the 15-inch clay pipe on the eastern line with a 12-inch polyethene pipe.
¶ 3. In May 2014, the City experienced an extremely intense rain and hail storm, accompanied by high winds; 1.3 inches of rain fell in just fifteen minutes. The total rainfall was 1.65 inches. The flow rate at the City's main sewer interceptor rose instantly from approximately 7 million gallons per day (MGD) to almost 70 MGD, and the storm caused 3 million gallons of combined wastewater (domestic sewage and stormwater) to overflow to receiving streams. That day, the City's combined sewer/stormwater line also backed up into the basements of plaintiffs' homes causing property damage.
¶ 4. In January 2015, plaintiffs sued the City, asserting that it had been negligent in the design, construction, and/or maintenance and repair of the City's public sewer lines. Plaintiffs also raised nuisance, trespass, and constitutional takings claims. With respect to their negligence claim, plaintiffs alleged that the City had not acted reasonably or prudently in designing the lines and in deciding to slip-line them in 1988. They further asserted that the City had a duty to keep and maintain the lines in a reasonably safe and proper condition for the public's use and benefit. Plaintiffs sought damages as well as injunctive relief requiring the City to remedy the storm/wastewater system near their property to prevent future damages. 1
¶ 5. The City moved for summary judgment. In addition to the facts recited above, the City produced evidence that it has had an excessive number of combined storm/sewer overflows due in part to the age of its infrastructure and that it has limited resources in addressing these issues. The City also noted that the state and the federal governments imposed significant regulatory constraints on its actions and priorities, which was one of many factors that influenced the City's decisions regarding the use of its limited funds. Plaintiffs' expert agreed that deciding the priority of projects was a matter of discretion and that such decisions involved the exercise of judgment and the weighing of technical merit and available resources. Based on these and additional proffered facts, the City maintained that it was entitled to summary judgment on numerous grounds, including immunity and plaintiffs' failure to establish causation for the negligence and nuisance claims.
¶ 6. Plaintiffs opposed the motion, submitting an affidavit from their expert engineer to supplement the expert's deposition testimony. With respect to their negligence claim, plaintiffs argued that they had produced evidence to show that the cause of the sewage backup in their homes was a combination of a bend in the westernmost pipe and a reduction in flow caused by the slip-lining. The parties disagreed about the degree of the bend in the pipe; they also disagreed whether the slip-lining had reduced the water flow given the root intrusion and other issues with the pre-1988 pipes. Plaintiffs also challenged the City's position regarding their nuisance, trespass, and takings claims.
¶ 7. In an April 2017 order, the court granted summary judgment to the City. It concluded that plaintiffs could not establish causation for purposes of their negligence claim. It thus did not reach the City's remaining arguments regarding this claim. Given the absence of causation, the trial court also rejected plaintiffs' nuisance claim. As to trespass, the court found that plaintiffs needed to show an intentional act and that there was no such allegation or evidence of that here. Finally, the court found that plaintiffs failed to present sufficient evidence to support their takings claim. This appeal followed.
¶ 8. We review a grant of summary judgment using the same standard as the trial court.
Richart v. Jackson
,
Smith v. Day
,
I. Immunity
A. Governmental/Proprietary Distinction
¶ 9. We begin with the question of immunity. "Municipal immunity is a common-law doctrine dating back in Vermont to the mid 1800s."
Hillerby v. Town of Colchester
,
¶ 10. We have continued to adhere to the governmental/proprietary distinction although it "has been criticized by courts and commentators for many years as unworkable."
Hudson
,
B. Discretionary-Function Immunity
¶ 11. At the same time, however, courts have long recognized a distinction between a municipality's planning and design decisions regarding sewer and water systems and its acts of constructing and maintaining such systems. See
Winn
,
The duties of the municipal authorities in adopting a general plan of drainage, and determining when and where sewers shall be built, of what size and at what level, are of a quasi judicial nature, involving the exercise of deliberate judgment and large discretion, and depending upon considerations affecting the public health and general convenience throughout an extensive territory; and the exercise of such judgment and discretion in the selection and adoption of the general plan or system of drainage is not subject to revision by a court or jury in a private action for not sufficiently draining a particular lot of land. But the construction and repair of sewers, according to the general plan so adopted, are simply ministerial duties; and for any negligence in so constructing a sewer, or keeping it in repair, the municipality which has constructed and owns the sewer may be sued by a person whose property is thereby injured.
Johnston v. District of Columbia
,
¶ 12. This form of immunity is distinct from the governmental/proprietary distinction discussed above. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895C cmt. g (1979); see also
Owen v. City of Independence
,
[A]s in the case of a State, a local governmental entity is immune in the exercise of those administrative functions that involve the making of a basic policy decision. Sometimes referred to as the exercise of a "discretionary function," as decisions made at the planning level or as the forming of an executive judgment, these are to be distinguished from the routine administrative activities in the operation of the government. The application of the immunity here is not simply a carry-over of the concept of a governmental function as distinguished from a proprietary function, but is based on the theory that some governmental functions are of a type that should not be subject to review and second-guessing by the courts in a tort action. As a practical matter courts may find fewer of these functions at a municipal level than at a federal or state level.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895C cmt. g (citations omitted); see also
Chabot v. City of Sauk Rapids
,
¶ 13. Vermont has explicitly adopted the discretionary-function exception for tort claims against the State. As set forth in 12 V.S.A. § 5601(e)(1), the State is protected from any claim "based upon the exercise or performance or failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a State agency or an employee of the State, whether or not the discretion involved is abused." "The purpose of the discretionary-function exception is to assure that courts do not invade the province of coordinate branches of government through judicial second guessing of legislative or administrative policy judgments."
Estate of Gage v. State
,
¶ 14. In Estate of Gage , we concluded that the State's decision not to place a guardrail around a brook that lay more than thirty feet from the edge of the driving lane fell within the discretionary-function exception. In reaching this conclusion, we applied a two-part test, asking whether "the acts involved [were] discretionary in nature, involving an element of judgment or choice" and if so, "whether that judgment involved considerations of public policy which the discretionary function exception was designed to protect." Id. ¶ 5 (quotations omitted). We determined that the State had discretion whether to guard against hazards that lay outside a particular clear zone, and this decision required consideration of numerous factors, including financial and environmental considerations. Id. ¶ 6. We emphasized that this "determination involved precisely the kind of policy judgments-the weighing of risks, financial costs, and environmental and aesthetic impacts-that the discretionary-function exception was designed to protect." Id. ¶ 7. "[W]here there is room for policy judgment and decision," we explained, "there is discretion." Id. (quotation omitted).
¶ 15. In reaching our conclusion, we rejected the plaintiff's argument that mere "routine ministerial tasks" were at issue, such as the removal of a beaver dam near the brook or the modest extension of a guardrail.
Id.
¶ 12. We explained that "[m]inisterial maintenance decisions of the kind suggested by [the] plaintiff have been described as the mere implementation of a previous policy decision, or routine periodic maintenance mandated by explicit policy."
Id.
(quotations omitted). We concluded that even if "the physical removal of a beaver dam ... represent[ed] a routine
maintenance operation, the actual decision to do so represent[ed] a policy judgment based on experience and the weighing of multiple factors."
Id.
"This is precisely the kind of policy judgment that the discretionary-function exception was designed to protect from judicial second-guessing."
Id.
(citing
Baum v. United States
,
¶ 16. We have similarly recognized "the vital public interest in the free and independent judgment of employees charged with the duty of making public policy decisions" in the context of qualified official immunity, which is based in part on a "rationale ... related to the doctrine of separation of powers."
Hudson
,
¶ 17. In
Hillerby
, this Court considered "[w]hether the traditional governmental/proprietary
distinctions in municipal tort immunity law should be replaced with the so-called private-analog test as now employed in state tort claims under 12 V.S.A. § 5601."
¶ 18. In his dissent, Justice Dooley advocated eliminating the governmental/proprietary distinction and "tailor[ing] our law on municipal immunity to the modern policy reasons for recognizing such immunity," including "preserv[ing] separation of powers and protect[ing] certain executive-branch decision-making from second-guessing in the judiciary."
¶ 19. Justice Johnson advocated "abolish[ing] general municipal immunity along with the governmental/proprietary distinction, but continu[ing] to protect local government bodies from being sued for their legislative, judicial and high-level policy decisions, and for their failure to follow up on regulatory duties imposed to protect the general public."
¶ 20. We do not read
Hillerby
to reject discretionary-function immunity for municipalities. As noted above, such immunity is distinct from the governmental/proprietary distinction and it has long been part of the common law. See, e.g.,
Winn
,
II. Negligence Claim
¶ 21. Turning to the instant case, we conclude as a matter of law that, like the types of decisions referenced above, the decisions at issue here-the design of the sewer system and the City's decision to slip-line the damaged pipes rather than replace the system entirely-"required a weighing of the type of public policy considerations that would warrant shielding [the City] from liability."
Hudson
,
¶ 22. Our conclusion that these decisions are best characterized as planning and design decisions rather than "maintenance" issues is informed by
Gage
and by cases from other states. The decision on how best to upgrade the pipes, once they were found to be in disrepair, "represented a discretionary policy judgment rather than a ministerial maintenance decision."
Gage
,
¶ 23. Plaintiffs believe that the pipes should be of a greater diameter and that there should not be a bend of a certain degree in a particular pipe. "When remedying a problem would require a city to, in essence, redesign or reconstruct the sewer system, then the complaint presents a design or construction issue."
Essman v. City of Portsmouth
,
¶ 24. Other courts have reached similar conclusions. In
Chabot
, for example, a homeowner sued a city for property damage resulting from flooding from a holding pond that was part of the city's storm drainage system.
III. Trespass Claim
¶ 25. The trial court concluded that plaintiffs' trespass claim failed because they failed to allege an intentional act by the City. We acknowledge that there is authority for the proposition that an intentional act is not always required to sustain a trespass claim. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 165 ("One who recklessly or negligently ... enters land in the possession of another or causes a thing ... so to enter is subject to liability to the possessor if ... his presence or the presence of the thing ... upon the land causes harm to the land, to the possessor, or to a thing ... in whose security the possessor has a legally protected interest."); see also
Dial v. City of O'Fallon
,
¶ 26. To fall within the rule identified by the Restatement,
the conduct of the actor either must involve an unreasonable risk of invading the possessor's interest in his exclusive possession of the land or some other interest connected with it, or must be caused by an abnormally dangerous activity carried on by the actor which, although carefully carried on, involves a risk of invading such an interest.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 165 cmt a.
¶ 27. We need not address whether we should adopt the provision of the Restatement cited above. We conclude that in this case, plaintiffs' trespass claim is simply a restated version of their negligence claim and that the City is immune from this claim as well. See
Tarbell
,
¶ 28. In their complaint, plaintiffs asserted that, due to the City's negligence, sewage, wastewater, and water entered their properties. This essentially restates their negligence claim. There is no allegation that the City acted intentionally nor, as discussed in greater detail below, is there any evidence to show that any intentional trespass by the City upon plaintiffs' property "amount[ed] to a physical taking of the property." Cf.
Tarbell
,
IV. Nuisance
A. Plaintiffs' Claim
¶ 29. We thus turn to plaintiffs' nuisance claim. Plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that the City's "conduct, actions and/or inactions ... created a nuisance that substantially and unreasonably interferes with [their] right to use and enjoy their properties." They also asserted that the City's conduct "constitutes a breach of duty to the plaintiffs." The behavior at issue is apparently the City's allegedly flawed design of the system and its decision to slip-line the pipes. It appears that the alleged nuisance is the "continued intrusion of ... sewage into [plaintiffs'] homes and the damage it causes both at the time and in decreasing the market value or marketability of their homes," which plaintiffs allege "is caused by the City's decision to spend its money on other projects." Plaintiffs asserted in their opposition to summary judgment that prior to the 2014 incidents, the City had notice of what appears to be a 1986 backup in the Daly home and a 2007 backup in the Lorman home.
B. Immunity
¶ 30. We have not yet addressed whether, and when, a municipality can be held liable on a nuisance claim under circumstances similar to these. Different treatises appear to endorse different approaches, sometimes within the same discussion, and case law reflects a variety of opinions on this question. See, e.g., 18A McQuillan, supra , § 53:77.21 ("Claims of nuisance per se and intentional nuisance in fact are not barred by governmental immunity. However, in other jurisdictions, claims of intentional nuisance are barred, as are claims of public nuisance." (footnotes omitted) ); id. § 53:151 ("There is a conflict in the jurisdictions as to the liability for inadequate sewers or drains. Sometimes the governing law is not harmonious even in the same state.").
¶ 31. McQuillan states that "[i]n jurisdictions that still provide tort immunity for municipalities under the governmental-proprietary distinction, there has long been an exception for nuisances."
Id.
§ 53:77.21. "One rationale is that nuisances involving damage to private property resemble unconstitutional takings. Another rationale is that life-threatening conditions created by the municipality ought not be treated as mere negligence."
Id.
(footnotes omitted). McQuillan also recognizes, however, that "[a]s a matter of law, particular municipal acts may constitute negligence rather than intentional nuisance," and that "[a] single isolated occurrence or act, which if regularly repeated would constitute a nuisance, is not a nuisance until it is regularly repeated."
Id.
; see also
Kellogg v. City of Albia
,
¶ 32. A different treatise, The Law of Torts, provides an analysis that we find compelling here. Dobbs posits that, stated bluntly, "a nuisance claim based on negligence is merely a negligence claim with harm to interests in use and enjoyment." 2 D. Dobbs, The Law of Torts § 400, at 623. He continues:
When a public entity creates a nuisance, some courts will reject common law immunities and subject the entity to liability. However, because a nuisance claim based on negligent acts is merely a claim of negligence that causes loss of use and enjoyment of land, the logical result is that immunity depends on whether the defendant's negligent acts called for immunity, not on the nuisance label itself. Thus if a city negligently creates a nuisance but its negligent acts are discretionary, it would enjoy the discretionary immunity. Of course, to the extent that the conduct exceeds the city's immunity, suit will be permitted.
¶ 33. We agree with Dobbs that logic dictates that the City is immune from plaintiffs' nuisance claim, which is essentially a restated version of plaintiffs' negligence claim. The claim rests on negligence and the same discretionary acts discussed above. Allowing this claim to proceed would lead to the same result that the discretionary-function immunity is designed to avoid: having the court second-guess the City's discretionary decisions regarding the design of the sewer system. We thus conclude as a matter of law, based on discretionary-function immunity, that judgment was properly granted to the City on this claim.
V. Takings Claim
¶ 34. Finally, we address plaintiffs' takings claim. Plaintiffs assert that based on their evidence, a reasonable jury could find that the backups were a direct or probable result of the slip-lining or angling. Plaintiffs argue that they have been forced to bear a public burden in the form of their neighbors' wastewater in their basements, and that they, unlike other City residents, must disclose to potential purchasers that there is an unresolved sewer problem nearby. Citing
Winn
,
¶ 35. The government cannot take private property for public use "without just compensation." See U.S. Const. amend. V ("[N]or shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.");
Vt. Const. ch. I, art. 2 ("[P]rivate property ought to be subservient to public uses when necessity requires it, nevertheless, whenever any person's property is taken for the use of the public, the owner ought to receive an equivalent in money."); see also
Ondovchik Family Ltd. P'ship v. Agency of Transp.
,
¶ 36. "[T]he United States Supreme Court [has] highlighted the importance of 'distinguishing between ... cases involving a permanent physical occupation, on the one hand, and cases involving a more temporary invasion, or government action outside the owner's property that causes consequential damages within, on the other.' "
Ondovchik Family Ltd. P'ship
,
¶ 37. The undisputed facts here show that the sewage backups on plaintiffs' property have been intermittent, limited, and transient. The Gallaghers have had one backup since 2007 and the Lormans have had two. The Dalys have had five backups between 1983 and 2014 with the closest backups occurring four years apart. While no backup is insignificant, the backups occurred intermittently over a long period of time, and we conclude that this does not suffice to show a taking under the law. Based on the undisputed facts, the City was entitled to summary judgment on this claim.
Affirmed .
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2018 VT 64, 193 A.3d 1174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-jackie-lorman-charles-melissa-gallagher-and-daniel-alicia-vt-2018.